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India Growing Faster Than What Data Shows, Will Grow At 7% Next Year: Report

Credit Suisse's Neelkanth Mishra said the country will grow at 7 per cent in FY24.(Representational)
Credit Suisse's Neelkanth Mishra said the country will grow at 7 per cent in FY24.(Representational)

India is growing faster than what is captured by the country's official data, and it presents a case for an upgrade of equities outlook, a Swiss brokerage said today.

Upgrading Indian equities to 'benchmark' from 'underweight', Credit Suisse said there is a scope for a growth of up to 14 per cent on the benchmark indices.

The brokerage firm's head of research Neelkanth Mishra said the country will grow at 7 per cent in FY24, as against the consensus estimates which peg the real growth to slip below 6 per cent.

Neelkanth Mishra told reporters that the consensus estimates are based on official data alone, whereas the brokerage analysis has taken into account a broad data set to arrive at its expectation.

Neelkanth Mishra said the growth in dense fuels -- which is typically below the real GDP growth as fuel efficiencies go up -- is over 4 per cent per annum for the last three years.

Similarly, revenue growths of the BSE500 companies also point out to a faster growth, he said.

"We are expecting a stronger acceleration in India's GDP growth in 2023 owing to several domestic growth drivers. Revival in government spending, increase in low-income jobs and easing of supply-chain bottlenecks should partly offset the impact of rate hikes, a slowing global economy and the need to reduce the balance-of-payments (BoP) deficit," he said.

The risk factors continue to be dependent on imported energy, reliance on foreign capital and a slowing global economy, he said.

The present inflation situation and outlook does not necessitate more rate hikes, but the RBI may hike purely to thwart any damage on the balance of payments front, he said.

From a markets perspective, he sounded more sanguine about domestic flows.

Neelkanth Mishra said it is a misnomer that China's difficulties are resulting in higher inflows into India, and added that the flows are driven more by region-based allocations by managers like Asia Pacific and Emerging Markets.

Therefore, it would help increase portfolio flows into India if China's lockdowns end, he told reporters.

The brokerage is overweight on the financial sector and feels the current high growth in credit will not lead to a spike in non performing assets.

It is underweight on the information technolgy and the industrials sectors, Neelkanth Mishra said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)